A new millipede genus and a new species of Asphalidesmus Silvestri, 1910 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Dalodesmidea) from southern Tasmania, Australia
Author
Mesibov, Robert
Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Launceston, Australia
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-04-07
7
7
55
74
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.7.111
35faba39-0638-40ea-905c-89894fe62b43
1313–2970
576437
2C6BD020-B54A-4119-9693-3231C9FCEFA6
Asphalidesmus
golovatchi
Mesibov
,
sp. n.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
D6CA5C87-8414-44C3-979A-080889549785
Figs. 1C, 1D
,
2C
,
6B
,
6C
,
7A
,
7B
,
8A
,
8B
, map
Fig. 9
.
Holotype
. Male.
Australia
,
Tasmania
,
Lake Osborne
track,
43º13’04”S
146º46’03”E
±
100 m
,
880 m
,
7 February 2004
,
K. Bonham
,
QVM 23
:25723.
Paratypes
.
2 females
, 2 stadium
VI
females,
Resurgence Cave
,
Vanishing Falls
karst,
43º23’S
146º38’E
±
1 km
,
25 April 1992
,
S. Eberhard
,
QVM 23
:12956
;
2 males
,
2 females
, 1 stadium
VI
male, 2 stadium
VI
females, same details but
28 August 1992
,
S. Eberhard
and
V
.
Wong
,
QVM 23
:12949
;
3 males
,
3 females
, 2 stadium
VI
females (includes male+female in copula),
Spring Cave
,
Vanishing Falls
karst,
43º23’S
146º38’E
±
1 km
,
28 April 1992
,
S. Eberhard
,
QVM 23
:12971
;
1 male
,
Warra
coupe WR001B,
43º05’48”S
146º41’55”E
±
100 m
,
90 m
,
pitfall
254 emptied
14 April 2000
,
R
.
Bashford
,
QVM 23
:45660
;
1 stadium
VI
female,
Mystery Creek Cave
track,
43º27’39”S
146º51’11”E
±
100 m
,
160 m
,
K. Bonham
and
R
. and
J. Francis
,
25 February 2001
,
QVM 23
:24747
;
1 male
, ca
100 m
uphill from
Mystery Creek cave
,
43º27’42”S
146º50’57”E
±
100 m
,
5 February 2006
,
K. Bonham
,
QVM 23
:46402
.
Material
examined.
4 females
, 1 stadium
VI
female,
Entrance Cave
,
Ida Bay
karst,
43º28’S
146º51’E
±
1 km
,
20 January 1985
,
S. Eberhard
, sample IB10-9
; ‘
small sp. on mud, upper levels above final siphon’,
QVM 23
:41576
;
3 males
,
3 females
, 2 stadium
VI
males,
Milk Run cave
,
Ida Bay
karst,
43º29’S
146º51’E
±
1 km
,
22 August 1985
,
S. Eberhard
, sample IB38-4, ‘above stream at bottom - deep’,
QVM 23
:12167
;
2 females
, 2 stadium
VI
females, 1 stadium
V
female,
Spider Den cave
(NL-3),
North Lune
karst,
43º24’S
146º50’E
±
1 km
,
5 February 1988
,
A. Clarke
,
QVM 23
:11671
;
1 stadium
VI
male, same details but
31 October 1988
, sample 1088-15,
QVM 23
:46558
;
1 stadium
VI
female, same details but sample 1088-23, ‘under detritus at base of cave dark zone’,
QVM 23
:46559
;
1 stadium
V
female,
Midnight Hole cave
,
Ida Bay
karst,
43º28’S
146º51’E
±
1 km
,
2 April 1989
,
S. Eberhard
, sample IB11-4,
QVM 23
: 12074
;
2 females
,
Ida Bay cave
46,
43º29’S
146º52’E
±
1 km
,
23 March 1990
,
S. Eberhard
, P1 chamber,
QVM 23
:46561
;
1 stadium
VI
female,
Huon River
(
Manuka Road
),
43º05’46”S
146º42’28”E
±
100 m
,
100 m
,
30 April 1997
,
R
.
Mesibov
, plot 1M1,
QVM 23
:41564
;
1 stadium
VI
female, same details but plot 1M2,
QVM 23
:46562
.
Figure 9.
Localities as of 1 January 2009 for
Noteremus summus
sp. n.
(Ɨ),
N. infimus
sp. n.
(·) and
Asphalidesmus golovatchi
sp. n.
(
Δ
). Scale bar = 25 km; grey lines are 100 m elevation contours. Town abbreviations: M = Maydena, G = Geeveston, S = Southport. Inset: map of Tasmania showing location of main map (rectangle).
Diagnosis
.
Differs from
A. leae
and
A. parvus
in having long, tapering rather than short, convex paranota, and in ozopore opening well away from base of paranotum (at about midheight on body in lateral view) rather than just above paranotal base.
Description
.
Juveniles and cave-dwelling adults unpigmented, but as in
Asphalidesmus leae
and
A. parvus
, tergites of surface-dwelling adults are partly encrusted with soil particles and stained light yellow-brown. Surface-dwelling males ca
7 mm
long, maximum diameter 0.7 mm, maximum width across paranota 1.2 mm.
Male (
Fig. 1C
) with head and last ring strongly flexed to face substrate. Head sparsely setose, as wide as collum; antennal sockets strongly impressed ventrolaterally, separated by about 1.5X socket diameter. Antenna (
Fig. 2C
) short and thick; antennomere 6 widest and longest; relative antennomere lengths 6>>3>2>(4,5). Collum with anterior edge nearly straight, posterior edge broadly convex, corners blunt. Overall ring widths diminishing gradually from ring 3 posteriorly. Collum, metatergites and paranota with transverse zone of small tubercles (
Figs 7A, 7B
), each bearing a stout, pointed seta; metazonites also with much smaller, non-setiferous tubercles anteriorly and posteriorly; prozonites with narrow band of longitudinal ridges just anterior to suture, elsewhere uniformly covered with very small protuberances with blunt, rounded tips directed slightly posteriorly. Limbus composed of long tabs with multi-toothed tips and a narrow, outwardly curving medial section. Tergites of rings 2-16 with paired, paramedian, dorsal projections (
Fig. 1D
), each projection thick, rounded and directed slightly posteriorly; tergites of rings 17 and 18 each with one mid-dorsal, thick, rounded and posteriorly directed projection (dorsal projections absent in juveniles). Paranota of ring 2 greatly expanded laterally and anteriorly and strongly depressed, in lateral view masking head, antennae and collum. Paranota of rings 3-18 set low on body (
Fig. 1D
), more or less hastate, strongly depressed; lateral extent diminishing gradually from anterior to posterior; anterior and posterior margins scalloped with small, usually discrete, rounded tabs. Ring 3 paranotum slightly overlapping ring 2 paranotum. Pore formula 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15-18; ozopore very small, opening in slight depression in low, cylindrical structure well above base of paranotum (
Fig. 7B
). Sternites somewhat longer than wide, longitudinal and transverse impressions well-defined. Pre-anal ring with a few dorsal marginal setae, epiproct not developed, hypoproct paraboloid. Spinnerets in square array (
Fig. 8B
) in slight depression with low partition wall between dorsal and ventral pairs; sheath separated from seta by annular gap. Anterior legs (
Fig. 2C
) short; prefemur and femur a little expanded dorsally; relative podomere lengths tarsus>(prefemur, femur)>(postfemur, tibia). No sphaerotrichomes or brush setae; very small tuberculation of metazonite surface extending onto coxa/trochanter. Spiracles (
Fig. 7B
) opening on short, wide-rimmed elevations; on diplosegments with anterior spiracle above anterior leg and oriented anterolaterally, and posterior spiracle above and about midway between anterior and posterior legbases. Gonopore small, opening on distomedial projection of leg 2 coxa. Legpair 6, 7 bases well-separated to accommodate retracted gonopods, legpair 4, 5 bases a little less separated.
Gonopod aperture ovoid, about one-third prozonite width; posterolateral margins slightly raised. Gonocoxae small, truncated conical, weakly joined distomedially, with a few setae on basomedial and distolateral surfaces. Cannula prominent, inserting in shallow depression on basal surface. Telopodites separate, reaching to legpair 4 bases when retracted. Telopodite (
Figs 6B, 6C
,
8A
) cylindrical, slightly tapering distally, with two slender branches arising at slight constriction at about three-quarters telopodite height; anteromedial branch bending laterally and terminating in ‘fishtail’ fork at about two-thirds height of posterolateral branch; posterolateral branch (= solenomere) curving posterolaterally, then slightly anteromedially before flattening and curling apically with two upright finger-like processes arising from curled, flat tip: a narrower, shorter, more lateral process, and a stouter, taller, more medial process bearing the end of the prostatic groove. Telopodite sparsely setose posterolaterally from near base to distal constriction. Prostatic groove running slightly anteriorly from insertion before running distally to telopodite constriction, then following curve of solenomere to tip.
Female as large as male; posterior margin of epigynum slightly raised medially; cyphopods not examined.
Distribution
and habitat.
Known from wet eucalypt forest and caves over ca
600 km
2
in
far southern
Tasmania
from ca
100 m
to
900 m
(
Fig. 9
). Uncommon in forest. Sympatric over the whole of its range with
A. parvus
, which also occurs in caves.
Etymology
.
Adjective, genitive singular, for Sergei I. Golovatch, Russian diplodologist, who has generously given me advice on diplopodological problems and who has taken a particular interest in
Asphalidesmus
.
Remarks
.
Cave specimens of
A. golovatchi
are a little smaller than surface-dwelling specimens in the same stadium. In some of the mature cave specimens the paramedian dorsal projections are greatly reduced, although the median dorsal projections on the last two leg-bearing rings can be clearly seen.
The pair in copula from Spring Cave (QVM 23:12971) are in the usual position for mating
Polydesmida
. Although the male’s head is flexed strongly down, there is still a gap between it and the female’s head.
The spinnerets in
A. leae
are arranged as in
A. golovatchi
, while in
A. parvus
low partition walls divide the depression housing the spinnerets into four separate compartments (
Figs 8
B-8D).